Civil-military relations have changed over time with respect to changing demographics, new domestic and international responsibilities, Industry-Defence cooperation, women in the armed forces and contemporary veteran wellbeing.The New Australian Military Sociology aims to provide an antipodean view to theorising civil-military entanglements and uses Australia’s unique geographic, political and cultural context to serve as a case study for other countries.
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Antipodean Insights into Civil-Military Relations
Brad West and Cate Carter
Chapter 1. Who Do We Think We Are? Demographic Changes in the Australian Defence Force and Implications for Social Legitimacy
Philip Hoglin
Chapter 2. Standing in the Picture: Autoethnographic Practice in Australian Military Research
Cate Carter
Chapter 3. The Australian Student Veteran Experience: Making Sense Using Lizzio’s Model
Ben Wadham, Lisa Andrewartha, Melanie K. T. Takarangi, Andrew Harvey, Brad West, Matthew Wyatt-Smith, Jodie Davis and Ella K. Moeck
Chapter 4. Resisting Change and Civilian Control: The Contested Terrain of New ADF Values
Jennifer Woodside and James Connor
Chapter 5. Symbolic Violence and the Politics of a Gender-Neutral Military
Donna Bridges and Elizabeth Wulff
Chapter 6. Interoperability, Domestic Disaster Response and Organisational Culture: Role Ambiguity between Military Personnel and Emergency Services in the 2019/20 Australian ‘Black Summer’ Bushfires
Haydn Mccomas and Brad West
Chapter 7. Australian Military Performativity: Implications for Separation
Hannah Taino-Spick and Sue Shore
Conclusion. Antipodean Military Sociology and the Future of Civil-Military Relations Analysis: the Promise of Civil Sphere Theory
Cate Carter and Brad West
Index
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